Ubiquitination & SUMOylation Antibodies

Ubiquitination is the process by which ubiquitin is attached to a substrate protein after it has been made. It has been known to affect proteins by altering cellular location, impacting protein activity, and adjusting protein-protein interactions. Research shows that sumoylation regulates protein-protein interactions and subcellular targeting and is involved in numerous processes such as nuclear-cytosolic transport, apoptosis, transcriptional regulation, response to stress, protein stability, and progression through the cell cycle. Ubiquitination antibodies and sumoylation antibodies are a useful tool to researchers investigating the control mechanisms associated with numerous nuclear proteins.